Verbund capital raising hit by govt tussle -paper

July 20 (Reuters) – Austrian utility Verbund’s (VERB.VI) plan for a capital raising of around 1 billion euros ($1.3 billion) could be delayed because of a government disagreement over whether to take part, a newspaper said on Tuesday.

Verbund, which is 51-percent owned by the Austrian state, said last month the government backed the planned capital increase and would participate in the issue with around 500 million euros, corresponding to its share in the company.

However, daily Der Standard reported that the Social Democrats, partner in Austria’s coalition government, would vote against participation in the capital raising at a government session on Tuesday.

Verbund was not immediately available for comment.

The Social Democrats want similar capital-boosting measures at other companies in which the state owns stakes, such as energy group OMV (OMVV.VI) and Austrian railway OeBB, Der Standard said.

The capital increase would be used to bring down Verbund’s debt, which grew last year after a 2 billion euro spending spree. [ID:nLDE65T04H]

Economy Minister Reinhold Mitterlehner, from the coalition’s conservative People’s Party, hopes to find a solution before the government’s next meeting on Aug. 24, the paper reported.

The Social Democrats and conservatives have ruled together since 2008 in a mostly stable broad-based coalition. ($1=.7706 Euro) (Reporting by Sylvia Westall; editing by Simon Jessop)

Austrian court rejects “dignity” lawsuit over deformed baby

Vienna – A court in Austria has thrown out a suit brought on behalf of a baby born with a deformed spine aimed at acknowledging his dignity of life, local media reported Thursday.

The lawsuit against the Austrian state was brought in the name of baby Emil Karg, who was born last August with an incompletely-formed spinal chord.

Emil’s parents, Sabine and Andreas Karg, were seeking to overturn a separate Supreme Court ruling from last March which awarded damages to the mother of a child born with the same condition, after doctors failed to detect the abnormality before birth.

After a Vienna court threw out Emil’s lawsuit on formal grounds, the family’s lawyer Paul Sutterluety said that he planned to appeal and would bring the case before the human rights court in Strasbourg if his efforts in Austria brought no results.

“The fact that the birth and existence of a child can result in a damage claim for alimony inevitably leads to labelling the child as damaged,” Sutterluety was quoted by Austrian media as saying.

The Vienna court argued that it could only award financial damages in Emil’s case but was in no position to rule on the alleged infringement of human dignity.

Emil is in good health, considering his condition, and weighs 8.5 kilograms, according to his parents who live in Lochau in western Austria. (dpa)

Dungeon dad ‘expects to die in jail’

Melbourne, Mar 7 (ANI): Austrian incest fiend Josef Fritzl, who locked his daughter in a cellar for 24 years and fathered seven children with her, expects to spend the rest of his life behind bars, his lawyer has revealed.

Fritzl, who is due to go on trial on 16 March, faces up to life imprisonment if convicted on charges of murder, rape, incest, false imprisonment and enslavement.

“He is 73 years old. The (length of) the sentence is of no importance to him,” The Daily Telegraph quoted Fritzl’s lawyer Rudolf Mayer, as telling Austrian state news agency APA.

Mayer said that Fritzl will plead guilty to all the charges, and added that he’s not a “Sex Monster” – referring to media headlines – and “loved (Elisabeth) in his own way.”

The trial’s verdict is expected on March 20.

Investigators say Fritzl confessed to imprisoning and raping his daughter – now in her 40s – in a soundproofed, windowless dungeon he built beneath their home.

Of the six surviving children Fritzl had with Elisabeth, three were raised in the family home.

The others were confined to the cellar for their whole lives, not seeing the light of day until they were discovered and released by police in April 2008.

The case first came to light after 19-year-old Kerstin, one of the children fathered by Fritzl and kept underground, became seriously ill and was taken to hospital.

A psychiatrist’s report last autumn judged that he was mentally fit to stand trial. (ANI)